登陆注册
19468100000043

第43章

And so the voyage went on.Gissing was quite content to do a two- hour trick at the wheel both morning and afternoon, and worked out some new principles of steering which gave him pleasure.In the first place, he noticed that the shuffle-board and quoit players, on the boat deck aft, were occasionally annoyed by cinders from the stacks, so he made it a general plan to steer so that the smoke blew at right angles to the ship's course.As the wind was prevailingly west, this meant that his general trend was southerly.Whenever he saw another vessel, a mass of floating sea-weed, a porpoise, or even a sea-gull, he steered directly for it, and passed as close as possible, to have a good look at it.Even Mr.Pointer admitted (in the mates' mess) that he had never experienced so eventful a voyage.To keep the quartermasters from being idle, Gissing had them knit him a rope hammock to be slung in the chart-room.He felt that this would be more nautical than a plush settee.

There was a marvellous sense of power in standing at the wheel and feeling the great hull reply to his touch.Occasionally Captain Scottie would emerge from his cabin, look round with a faint surprise, and come to the bridge to see what was happening.Mr.Pointer would salute mutely, and continue to study the skyline with indignant absorption.The Captain would approach the wheel, where Gissing was deep in thought.Rubbing his hands, the Captain would say heartily, "Well, I think I've got it all clear now."Gissing sighed.

"What is it?" the Captain inquired anxiously.

"I'm bothered about the subconscious.They tell us nowadays that it's the subconscious mind that is really important.The more mental operations we can turn over to the subconscious realm, the happier we will be, and the more efficient.Morality, theology, and everything really worth while, as I understand it, spring from the subconscious."The Captain's look of cheer would vanish."Maybe there's something in that.""If so," Gissing continued, "then perhaps consciousness is entirelyspurious.It seems to me that before we can get anywhere at all, we've got to draw the line between the conscious and the subconscious.What bothers me is, am I conscious of having a subconscious, or not? Sometimes I think I am, and then again I'm doubtful.But if I'm aware of my subconscious, then it isn't a genuine subconscious, and the whole thing's just another delusion--"The Captain would knit his weather-beaten brow and again retire anxiously to his quarters, after begging Gissing to be generous and carry on a while longer.Occasionally, pacing the starboard bridge-deck, sacred to captains, Gissing would glance through the port and see the metaphysical commander bent over sheets of foolscap and thickly wreathed in pipe-smoke.

He himself had fallen into a kind of tranced felicity, in which these questions no longer had other than an ingenious interest.His heart was drowned in the engulfing blue.As they made their southing, wind and weather seemed to fall astern, the sun poured with a more golden candour.He stood at the wheel in a tranquil reverie, blithely steering toward some bright belly of cloud that had caught his fancy.Mr.Pointer shook his head when he glanced surreptitiously at the steering recorder, a device that noted graphically every movement of the rudder with a view to promoting economical helmsmanship.Indeed Gissing's course, as logged on the chart, surprised even himself, so that he forbade the officers taking their noon observations.When Mr.Pointer said something about isobars, the staff- captain replied serenely that he did not expect to find any polar bears in these latitudes.

He had hoped privately for an occasional pirate, and scanned the sea- rim sharply for suspicious topsails.But the ocean, as he remarked, is not crowded.They proceeded, day after day, in a solitary wideness of unblemished colour.The ship, travelling always in the centre of this infinite disk, seemed strangely identified with his own itinerant spirit, watchful at the gist of things, alert at the point which was necessarily, for him, the nub of all existence.He wandered about the pomerania~s sagely ordered passages and found her more and more magical.She went on and on, with some strange urgent vitality of her own.Through the fiddleys onthe boat deck came a hot oily breath and the steady drumming of her burning heart.From outer to hawse-hole, from shaft-tunnel to crow's-nest, he explored and loved her.In the whole of her proud, faithful, obedient fabric he divined honour and exultation.Poised upon uncertainty, she was sure.The camber of her white-scrubbed decks, the long, clean sheer of her hull, the concave flare of her bows--what was the amazing joy and rightness of these things? And yet the grotesque passengers regarded her only as a vehicle, to carry them sedatively to some clamouring dock.Fools! She was more lovely than anything they would ever see again! He yearned to drive her endlessly toward that unreachable perimeter of sky.

On land there had been definite horizons, even if disappointing when reached and examined; but here there was no horizon at all.Every hour it slid and slid over the dark orb of sea.He lost count of time.The tremulous cradling of the Pomerania, steadily climbing the long leagues; her noble forecastle solemnly lifting against heaven, then descending with grave beauty into a spread of foaming beryl and snowdrift, seemed one with the rhythm of his pulse and heart.Perhaps there had been more than mere ingenuity in his last riddle for the theological skipper.Truly the subconscious had usurped him.Here he was almost happy, for he was almost unaware of life.It was all blue vacancy and suspension.The sea is the great answer and consoler, for it means either nothing or everything, and so need not tease the brain.

同类推荐
  • 词苑萃编

    词苑萃编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 古易考原

    古易考原

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 还丹众仙论

    还丹众仙论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 季冬纪

    季冬纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 小问

    小问

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 千万筹码:专宠天使甜心

    千万筹码:专宠天使甜心

    “求求你放过我!”她哭喊着成为了他的女人,他却不知怜惜,被仇恨蒙蔽双眼,一次次伤害她到体无完肤。本是柔弱的孩子,却顶着第一美人的名号,将自己当做筹码卖给了他。在父母的抛弃和他的囚禁下,依然不舍本心的善良坚强。她深深吸引了他……
  • 把你的情绪变成诗

    把你的情绪变成诗

    生活有时让人觉得挺乏味,但有时又有意想不到的人或事情出现。当你的想象力跟不上生活的变化时,至少说明你被生活磨灭了很多原本属于你的天性。你原本是谁?你原本是来做什么的?你曾经和谁牵手,但最后又为什么不得不放弃?透过那天边的云彩,你试图想看清点什么,但那云总是多变而美丽,引你泪下,让你对她的丰富生出无限的期待。所以沐浴她吧,让她刺激你的心灵,让你做个追梦仙子。绽放你的身体,绽放你的心灵,绽放你的眼泪,让你的生命更生动,更有灵性。
  • 幸福品味(读者精品)

    幸福品味(读者精品)

    那一个时代事实上总有许许多多不满现状的人。现代以前,这些人怎样对付他们的“不满”呢?在老百姓是怨命,怨世道,怨年头。年头就是时代,世道由于气数,都是机械的必然。本集合了不同的名人对成长的理解的作品集。
  • 三界大神皇

    三界大神皇

    一位昔日的天才少年,意外获得绝世之宝,从此走上逆天之路,天道不公,则天可屠,神佛不仁,神佛可弑,仗剑天涯路,美女在我身,不求长生,只争一世逍遥。
  • 拳霸天下之英雄有梦

    拳霸天下之英雄有梦

    凡人也该有梦吧,鱼逆流而上跃龙门,万千草木扎根妄图万古长青,鸟欲振翅化鲲鹏。凡人也该有梦吧,是英雄争霸,还是安稳度日?
  • 深渊焚魁

    深渊焚魁

    他是穿越界的耻辱!修真界的奇葩!初到异界,少年如何一步步登入绝巅,寻找日月星辰,人类起源,因果循环的奥秘!
  • 英雄联盟之符能战神

    英雄联盟之符能战神

    符文大陆,以武为尊,看一个堕落豪门废材,如何化身为大陆的主宰!
  • 混在唐初

    混在唐初

    银鞍白鼻驹,绿地障泥锦,细雨春风花落时,挥鞭直就胡姬饮。临风丽人吹玉箫,向月嫦娥解罗裙,三杯然诺五岳轻,意气素霓生勇心。平明拭剑出乡门,十步杀人千里寻,薄幕垂鞭归柳巷,事了拂衣藏名身。穿到初唐,方兴发现自己只是个无所事事的游侠,而家中有妹妹还有个童养媳,都等着他来养。既然如此,那就从游侠做起,混在大唐吧。
  • 精彩绚丽的宇宙时空

    精彩绚丽的宇宙时空

    现代社会的飞速发展很大程度上得益于科技的进步,“科技是第一生产力”已日益成为人们的共识。但是,由于现代科学的分工越来越细,众多的学科令人目不暇接。对于处于学习阶段的广大青少年而言,难免有“乱花渐欲迷人眼”的困扰。有鉴于此,我们组织了数十名在高等院校、教育科研机构的工作、有着丰富的青少年教育的专家学者,编选了这套《新编科技大博览》。
  • 袖色倾国逢君时

    袖色倾国逢君时

    慕容染袖很幸运,她轻易便站在了天下女子可能终生都不敢企及的高度;可也很不幸,盛后必然有衰,她自然明白自己亦站在了最危险的高度。皇帝唤她一声姐姐,却给了她天下女子至尊的权力与殊荣。她以长公主的身份执掌后宫、参知政事。权力与争斗注定相随相伴,而那尘封的层层往事与宫闱隐秘,仿佛命运鉴定般揭开,所有的现状被打破。亲人,还是爱人?前世,还是今生?那么多的男子,那么多的女子,爱她恨她喜她怨她,可却都承认,也许在这个纤柔的女子,拈花一笑,眉目流转间,天地已然变色。袖色倾国“可是,我只是想活着等那么一个人,”她淡淡地笑,“我不知道他是谁,可我想,我已等了他太久......”~~~~~~PS:非宫斗,非女尊,想看小白女主的慎入